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‘Hero’ lawyer who rescued torture victim suspended from practice

Author
Jeremy Wilkinson,
Publish Date
Thu, 10 Jul 2025, 6:24pm
Jason Yang. Photo / LinkedIn
Jason Yang. Photo / LinkedIn

‘Hero’ lawyer who rescued torture victim suspended from practice

Author
Jeremy Wilkinson,
Publish Date
Thu, 10 Jul 2025, 6:24pm

A lawyer who owned a nightclub was put between a 鈥渞ock and a hard place鈥 when he rescued an employee from being brutally tortured by one of his legal clients.

Auckland-based criminal lawyer Jason Yang has now been suspended for the 鈥渓ess than frank鈥 statements he gave to police following the incident, which saw his employee abducted by gang members and tortured with an electric drill.

In the early hours of the morning in 2023, Yang received Instagram messages from one of his clients who had abducted the nightclub employee.

That employee had slapped the bottom of a woman whose partner was a Head Hunters gang member.

The victim was taken to a Helensville property where multiple men drilled holes in his shin and knee with an electric drill, burned his forehead with cigarette butts, cut him with a heated knife, poured boiling water on him and was hit with a metal pole.

Ultimately, seven men went on to plead guilty to the man鈥檚 abduction and torture, but it was Yang, who came to the employee鈥檚 aid and liaised with the abductors for him to be released.

One of those men was a legal client of Yang鈥檚 for unrelated matters.

Yang took his employee to the hospital, where police, who were onsite for another matter, assumed he was involved and handcuffed him before taking him to the station for questioning.

LtoR Jade Jerome (grey jumper) and Israel Lama (white t-shirt)
Auckland High Court arraignment for Head Hunters members Israel Lama, Nathan Tuaiti and Jade Jerome, who tortured another man -- including drilling a hole in his knee and dousing him in boiling water -- after he allegedly smacked a woman's bottom at an Auckland nightclub. Photo / Michael Craig LtoR Jade Jerome (grey jumper) and Israel Lama (white t-shirt) Auckland High Court arraignment for Head Hunters members Israel Lama, Nathan Tuaiti and Jade Jerome, who tortured another man -- including drilling a hole in his knee and dousing him in boiling water -- after he allegedly smacked a woman's bottom at an Auckland nightclub. Photo / Michael Craig

Just before 4am, Yang signed his first written statement about what he claimed he knew about the incident.

In it, he 鈥渇udged鈥 how he鈥檇 come to know about his employee鈥檚 plight, and concealed that he knew one of the kidnappers.

Four days later, he amended that statement and provided additional information to police.

Rock and a hard place

Following the incident, the New Zealand Law Society levelled charges of misconduct against Yang, claiming that he took too long to amend his first statement.

The charges made their way to the Lawyers and Conveyancers Disciplinary Tribunal, where Yang explained that he was put in an extremely difficult position between acting for his client and acting for his employee.

Yang told the tribunal that when he made his first statement, he was unsure how much information was covered by attorney-client privilege, and had been threatened by the abductors about making any disclosure to the police.

In a ruling released today, the tribunal accepted that Yang was physically and emotionally distressed at the time, and given the 鈥渦nexpected and unprecedented circumstances鈥 he was in, his confusion about his obligations regarding client privilege was understandable.

鈥淚n the cool light of hindsight, Mr Yang accepts he was not acting for a client when he made his first statement to police,鈥 the tribunal said.

鈥淲e have considerable sympathy for Mr Yang at this point. This was not a textbook situation. He had undertaken considerable risk in obtaining release of the victim and, having succeeded, was now caught between a rock and a hard place.鈥

The tribunal said that it could criticise him for not fixing the situation sooner, but overall it had empathy for his 鈥渆xquisite plight鈥.

Former Head Hunters prospect Ricky Harder appears in the High Court at Auckland for sentencing after admitting to having participated in the May 2023 kidnapping and torture of a stranger. Photo / Michael CraigFormer Head Hunters prospect Ricky Harder appears in the High Court at Auckland for sentencing after admitting to having participated in the May 2023 kidnapping and torture of a stranger. Photo / Michael Craig

It was acknowledged that his omission to provide all the information to police would have slowed their investigation, but he did so from a place of fear; from both being viewed as a suspect, and from the kidnappers.

Ultimately, the tribunal found that no harm was done because he provided all the information to police four days later, and convinced his client to come clean as well.

鈥楲ess than frank鈥

A standards committee of the Law Society that prosecuted Yang before the tribunal focused on the four-day delay between his police statements, noting that he came forward on the same day a search warrant was carried out at his home.

However, the tribunal said it was far less critical of the delay given the trauma he鈥檇 been through, and that he鈥檇 been taking active steps to help the police.

鈥淭he Standards Committee鈥檚 case has been suspicious and distrustful of Mr Yang. Because we find that he was working on his client and collating useful material, and because we find he intended to contact the Police, we assess his position differently,鈥 the tribunal said.

The standards committee also noted that in 2023, when the incident occurred, Yang was being investigated after trading DJ lessons for legal services and then trying to sue his client when they didn鈥檛 pay for an under-the-table job he tried to hide from his employer.

It said that given this investigation, which resulted in Yang being suspended from practice for a year, he should have been 鈥渙n notice鈥 about his conduct as a lawyer.

The tribunal dismissed this submission and said the facts of the case were 鈥渞adically different鈥 and said it struggled to see why it took such a negative view of his conduct.

鈥淭he case was serious, involving kidnapping and torture. On the other hand, we empathise with Mr Yang鈥檚 plight and, without totally forgiving him for his misconduct, we can well understand it,鈥 the tribunal said.

鈥淚n some respects, Mr Yang emerges as a hero who secured release of a torture victim.

鈥淣evertheless, he made a statement to Police that was less than frank.鈥

The tribunal said that despite its sympathy for Yang, a lawyer needed to be truthful with police, 鈥減articularly in a matter as grave as this one鈥 and that while it didn鈥檛 consider strike off was necessary, some form of penalty was.

Ultimately, the tribunal opted to censure Yang, suspend him for three months, and order him to pay nearly $13,000 in legal costs.

Yang declined to comment.

Jeremy Wilkinson is an Open Justice reporter based in Manawat奴, covering courts and justice issues with an interest in tribunals. He has been a journalist for nearly a decade and has worked for 九一星空无限 since 2022.

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